Opinion

Long after the virus is gone, the trauma from quarantine will linger

When historians look back at the coronavirus pandemic, they won't simply discuss the hundreds of thousands of lost lives and widespread political, economic and social chaos. As a history graduate student, I can imagine how my colleagues would approach this from a scholarly level if they were discussing a distant event rather than a current one.

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Oil companies can set their own royalty rates from drilling on public lands thanks to Trump: report

In a display of loyalty to what Greenpeace called "the most polluting industry in history," the Trump administration is allowing dozens of oil and gas companies to set their own rates for royalties they're required to pay on revenue generated from drilling on public lands.

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With Covid-19, the Alex Jonesification of the GOP is now complete

Welcome to another edition of What Fresh Hell?, Raw Story’s roundup of news items that might have become controversies under another regime, but got buried – or were at least under-appreciated – due to the daily firehose of political pratfalls, unhinged tweet storms and other sundry embarrassments coming out of the current White House.

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'A new low': Trump buried for heading to the golf course as COVID-19 US death toll heads for 100,000

Donald Trump was being raked over the coals on Saturday morning after it was reported that he headed out to the golf course as the U.S. death toll from the coronavirus pandemic nears the 100,000 mark.

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America under Donald Trump: A failed state in slow motion

What is a failed state? It's a country that would hire me to make things work.

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'Obamagate' is fake — the real scandal is what happened to Hillary Clinton

Politicized investigations, interference in elections, and abusive targeting by law enforcement are all the makings of a juicy political scandal. And President Donald Trump would like us to believe that such a scandal, with each of these components, is real and — even if he can't name any crime that might have been committed — directed at him. That's why he has promoted the lazy moniker "Obamagate," an all-encompassing term for the vague allegations of wrongdoing surrounding the conduct of the previous administration and the investigators probing the ties between his campaign and the Kremlin's interference in the 2016 election.

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White evangelical Trump adviser labeled as a 'racist' and 'white supremacist' for 'Massa Trump' tweet

When Eric Metaxas took to Twitter to invent a fake quote from former Vice President Joe Biden he presumably sought to mock the Democratic candidate, but what he ended up doing is bringing people together against his own racism.

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Supreme Court ruling could doom GOP's attempts to enact corporate COVID-19 immunity

The landmark Supreme Court decision that upheld most of the Affordable Care Act could help doom efforts of Trump Republicans who are trying to protect companies that force their employees to go to work and healthcare providers from lawsuits.

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Cuomo order that sent estimated 4,300 Covid-19 patients to nursing homes denounced as 'single dumbest decision anyone could make'

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo is facing new criticism after the Associated Press reported Friday that a state directive led to over 4,300 still recovering coronavirus patients being sent to New York's "already vulnerable nursing homes."

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America is facing two very different coronavirus pandemics

No description of the coronavirus is more misleading than calling it “the great equalizer.”

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Trump supporters in Michigan focused on mail-in voting and ‘Obamagate’ as state is battered by coronavirus, unemployment and flooding

Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer has had a lot to deal with this week, from the coronavirus pandemic and job losses to severe flooding in parts of her state. But where there are real problems, there are also far-right extremists and diehard MAGA voters obsessing over non-issues — and journalist Tim Alberta, in an article for Politico, examines some of the things they have been focusing on in that key battleground state.

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A historian explains why the anti-Trump 'Mourning in America' ad could seal Trump’s fate in November

The promise of American greatness knew no bounds in “Morning in America,” the iconic ad created by the group of political consultants and advertising gurus (the “Tuesday Team”) who worked for Ronald Reagan’s 1984 reelection campaign. In the ad, Americans were working, getting married, and buying homes – confident that the country they lived in was “prouder and stronger and better” under President Reagan’s leadership than four short years before.

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Buckle up: How 'Bush's Brain' and Trump's ego are going to ride Brad Parscale's Death Star into November

There have been many rumors in recent weeks that the Trump campaign is starting to disintegrate. This is not surprising. All you have to do is read Trump's Twitter feed to see that the president does not like bad news and he will kill any messenger who brings it to him. Lately, there has been a whole lot of bad campaign news.The New York Times has reported that Trump has been getting so angry at the decaying poll numbers that he yelled at campaign manager Brad Parscale and threatened to sue him during a heated phone call. (Parscale reportedly replied, "I love you too," and flew up to Washingon right away to mend fences.)

Indeed, the polls have not been looking good for Trump, but then they haven't looked very good his entire term. An impeached president whose approval rating has always hovered around 42% doesn't have a lot of room for error to begin with. Now that he's shown what a disastrous leader he is in a crisis, there very little prospect that it's going to improve.

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